OBJECTIVE: To investigate the reporting of the analysis of interobserver and intra-observer variability within clinical research studies from five high-impact cardiology journals published in 2005. STUDY DESIGN AND SETTING: A cross-sectional study using a combined electronic and manual search identified 180 of 511 eligible articles that reported the assessment of observer variability. Sixty of these were randomly selected for detailed review. RESULTS: The proportion of the 60 studies reporting interobserver variability, intra-observer variability, or both were 27%, 17%, and 53%, respectively. The reported methodological design of interobserver and intra-observer analyses included a specific protocol in 42% and 33%, identified observers as independent in 31% and 17%, as blinded in 50% and 31%, and identified a prior statistical plan in only 33% and 36%, respectively. Pearson correlation was the most reported measure for continuous variables, and the methods of Bland and Altman were reported in 15% of interobserver and 14% of intra-observer studies, respectively. For categorical variables, a kappa statistic was reported in 82% and 80%, respectively. CONCLUSION: Reliability assessment is hampered by unclear and incomplete reporting of interobserver and intra-observer analysis. For continuous variables, inappropriate methods were most frequently reported as being done.
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the reporting of the analysis of interobserver and intra-observer variability within clinical research studies from five high-impact cardiology journals published in 2005. STUDY DESIGN AND SETTING: A cross-sectional study using a combined electronic and manual search identified 180 of 511 eligible articles that reported the assessment of observer variability. Sixty of these were randomly selected for detailed review. RESULTS: The proportion of the 60 studies reporting interobserver variability, intra-observer variability, or both were 27%, 17%, and 53%, respectively. The reported methodological design of interobserver and intra-observer analyses included a specific protocol in 42% and 33%, identified observers as independent in 31% and 17%, as blinded in 50% and 31%, and identified a prior statistical plan in only 33% and 36%, respectively. Pearson correlation was the most reported measure for continuous variables, and the methods of Bland and Altman were reported in 15% of interobserver and 14% of intra-observer studies, respectively. For categorical variables, a kappa statistic was reported in 82% and 80%, respectively. CONCLUSION: Reliability assessment is hampered by unclear and incomplete reporting of interobserver and intra-observer analysis. For continuous variables, inappropriate methods were most frequently reported as being done.
Authors: Robert M Gow; Benjamin Ewald; Lillian Lai; Letizia Gardin; Jane Lougheed Journal: Ann Noninvasive Electrocardiol Date: 2009-04 Impact factor: 1.468
Authors: Michael Y Mi; Jamie E Collins; Vladislav Lerner; Elena Losina; Jeffrey N Katz Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord Date: 2013-06-09 Impact factor: 2.362